Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Middle school teacher here. Here are the accommodations I most commonly see in this situation:
Teacher check-ins.
Remind student to take their time.
Check work for completion and accuracy.
Let student choose between several teacher-approved activities if they finish early.
Teacher holds on to tech device when not being actively used in class.
Sometimes tech time is put into accommodations as a reward if the work has been completed to the teacher’s satisfaction.
Thank you! This is really helpful.
For this to work there has to be parents who will enforce it. “Teacher holds on to tech device when not being actively used in class.” Students will argue or not give up their device because other students aren’t having to give up their devices. The teacher can’t spend half the class arguing with the student to hand over his or her device. Administrators don’t approve of applying consequences like detention or being sent to the office. So there isn’t much a teacher can do.
You as a parent should look at on the history of the device and be ready and able to enforce a consequence if the teacher says your child was playing games or you find evidence of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Middle school teacher here. Here are the accommodations I most commonly see in this situation:
Teacher check-ins.
Remind student to take their time.
Check work for completion and accuracy.
Let student choose between several teacher-approved activities if they finish early.
Teacher holds on to tech device when not being actively used in class.
Sometimes tech time is put into accommodations as a reward if the work has been completed to the teacher’s satisfaction.
Thank you! This is really helpful.
Anonymous wrote:We had this problem with our kid in late elementary. He's now in a different school with a different setup, so I can't say we solved it exactly.
I do think that this is a common issue and that schools need to work on making sure the activities they can do after finishing their work are not more interesting than the work itself.
Teacher-approved activities afterwards is a good idea, as one PP said. The challenge is that even some of the games are often teacher-approved. For example, my kid would happily play online math games that were pretty easy for him but much more fun than working hard on whatever assignment was in front of him.
I think you may need to troubleshoot with individual teachers to get this right, and it will be hard because they will have different teachers for each subject. It might be more useful to focus on the quality of the work or having the "check work" part written in. Probably all the kids do this, so it might not make sense to try to totally get rid of the behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Kid could have paper work instead of ipad work.
Anonymous wrote:Middle school teacher here. Here are the accommodations I most commonly see in this situation:
Teacher check-ins.
Remind student to take their time.
Check work for completion and accuracy.
Let student choose between several teacher-approved activities if they finish early.
Teacher holds on to tech device when not being actively used in class.
Sometimes tech time is put into accommodations as a reward if the work has been completed to the teacher’s satisfaction.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps it could say that when he is done with his work, his ipad must be put away.
Anonymous wrote:Why does he have an iPad at school?